AUTHOR=Panariello Claudio , Bresin Roberto TITLE=Sonification of Computer Processes: The Cases of Computer Shutdown and Idle Mode JOURNAL=Frontiers in Neuroscience VOLUME=Volume 16 - 2022 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnins.2022.862663 DOI=10.3389/fnins.2022.862663 ISSN=1662-453X ABSTRACT=Software is intangible, invisible and at the same time pervasive in everyday devices, activities, services accompanying our life. Therefore, citizens hardly realize its complexity, power and impact in many aspects of their daily life. In this work we report on one experiment that aims at letting citizens make sense of software presence and activity in their everyday lives, through sound: the invisible complexity of the processes involved in the shutdown of a personal computer. We used sonification to map information embedded in software events into the sound domain. The software events involved in a shutdown have names related to the physical world and its actions: write events (information is saved into digital memories), kill events (running processes are terminated) and exit events (running programs are exited). The research work presented in this paper has a ``double character''. It is an artistic realization that develops specific aesthetic choices, and it has also pedagogical purposes informing the causal listener about the complexity of software behaviour. Two different sound design strategies have been applied: one strategy influenced by the sonic characteristics of the Glitch music scene, which makes a deliberate use of glitch-based sound materials, distortions, aliasing, quantization noise and all the ``failures'' of digital technologies; and a second strategy based on the sound samples of a subcontrabass Paetzold recorder, an unusual and special acoustic instrument which unique sound has been investigated in the contemporary art music scene. Analysis of quantitative ratings and of qualitative comments of 37 participants revealed that the sound design strategies succeeded in communicating the nature of the computer processes. Participants also showed in general an appreciation towards the aesthetics of the peculiar sound models used in this study.